OK, then I would pose the same question to you as the one Loudmouth answered in post #27 about emergence ...
We know that quantum objects behave like particles AND waves. At the macro scale, collections of quantum objects *appear* to behave like particles or waves. The de Broglie wavelength of a thrown baseball is immeasurably small, but it exists, the baseball does have wave properties.
So behaving like a 100% particle is not an emergent property of the macroscale. The earth behaves a little bit like a wave. So does the sun, etc.
I would say that the continuousness of motion that we experience on the macroscale is the same. The discontinuities are immeasurable, but we have reason to believe they must exist at the quantum level.
If you ask a physicist, out of the blue, "Is the motion of a baseball continuous." she'd probably say yes. But if you then said, "But isn't it true that at the quantum level, blah blah blah..." she might well say, "Well, if you're going to split hairs, sure at some level something goes on that is not what we think of as continuous motion."
If it is the case that we're waiting to synthesize GR and QM in order to answer that question, then give me some odds (based on your opinion). What are the odds the answer will be that space is grainy vs. smooth?
The grainy/smooth question is not identical with the continuous/discontinuous motion question. If space is grainy, then I think motion has to be discontinuous. If space is smooth, then I still think these quantum weirdnesses of atomic orbitals and particles in boxes show that motion is not continuous in the usual sense.
But what is the wavefunction outside the box? That's more pertinent to my question. Assuming no tunneling happens here (based on the way the problem is described), I would assume it is zero everywhere outside the box. Is that correct?
Yes, but this depends on the simplifying assumptions of the scenario, namely "(also known as the
infinite potential well or the
infinite square well) describes a particle free to move in a small space surrounded by
impenetrable barriers"
One cannot actually build such a box with infinitely tall walls. If you built a reasonably strong box, the solution would be approximately correct, but there would be some bleed of the wavefunction into the walls.
If so, my next question is: Can the box be located in different places?
The thought-experiment box can't be built at all, so it can't be moved. An approximate box could conceivably be moved. This would presumably cause some change to the wavefunction that I can't easily intuit (some sort of Doppler shift effect as the walls move with respect to our particle), but I expect the particle to stay in the box.
But what does this really mean that you observe it in a location? I'm not sure I understand what you mean by that anymore.
Sitting in our easy chair, next to our impossible box, we can derive the wavefunction of the particle in the box. From the wavefunction, we don't know very much about where the particle is. Its average position is in the middle of the box. To actually see where it is, you have to bounce a photon off it (or make some other measurement). Alas, this will screw up the wavefunction, but from judging the angle the photon comes off at, you can determine (with some range of uncertainty) where the particle was at the exact moment the photon hit it.
In my classical understanding, energy is a scalar. So what does it mean now that energy has real & imaginary parts?
The
wavefunction has real and imaginary parts, but the energy of the particle in the box is a real number.